*[[Sale of the Century]] - ''The Benny Hill Show'' spoofed this with ''Sale of the Half-Century''. Ho ho! You may stop laughing now. '''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VuWcXJUHX3Y Watch the clip].'''

*[[Sale of the Century]] - ''The Benny Hill Show'' spoofed this with ''Sale of the Half-Century''. Ho ho! You may stop laughing now. '''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VuWcXJUHX3Y Watch the clip].'''

+

*[[Screen Test (1)|Screen Test]] - a couple of brief clips turn up in the film ''Son of Rambow''. The movie revolves around an attempt to make an entry for the show's "Young Filmmaker of the Year" competition.

*[[Take Your Pick]] - Tony Hancock's the man for this. One 1958 radio episode of ''Hancock's Half Hour'' (retrospectively titled "The Prize Money") began with a seven-minute spoof, with Hancock winning £4000 despite the best efforts of [[Michael Miles]] as played by [[Kenneth Williams]]. The Yes/No interlude was also taken off by Hancock and [[John Junkin]] on an episode of the variety programme ''The Blackpool Show'' in 1966.

*[[Take Your Pick]] - Tony Hancock's the man for this. One 1958 radio episode of ''Hancock's Half Hour'' (retrospectively titled "The Prize Money") began with a seven-minute spoof, with Hancock winning £4000 despite the best efforts of [[Michael Miles]] as played by [[Kenneth Williams]]. The Yes/No interlude was also taken off by Hancock and [[John Junkin]] on an episode of the variety programme ''The Blackpool Show'' in 1966.

*[[Telly Addicts]] - appears on the video for Blur's ''It Could Be You''.

*[[Telly Addicts]] - appears on the video for Blur's ''It Could Be You''.

Revision as of 15:11, 22 September 2019

Contents

Introduction

Whenever you're doing a sketch show, the easy fallback position is to target the game show. So easy to parody, the laughs almost write themselves. Er, quite. Here is our own half-assed attempt to catalogue some of the finer moments of British comedy masquerading as incisive comment. Also listed are other places and references where you might not otherwise expect game show action to pop up.

Spoofs of real game shows

Ask the Family - Not The Nine O'Clock News re-imagined this as a contest between the Brainies and the Smaughtarses, two "perfectly ordinary" families of quantity surveyors. Watch the clip

Bargain Hunt - Taken off by the Dead Ringers impersonation team, and Harry Hill.

Big Brother - Virtually every show under the sun's taken this off. Graham Norton and SM:TV Live and to name just two. The celebrity version also featured heavily in the finale of Ricky Gervais' Extras, with a fine performance by Lionel Blair.

Come Dine with Me - In the 2010 series of Big Brother, a task entitled, Don't Come Dine with Me saw three housemates each attempt to create a meal for their fellow housemates. Each of the three housemates had just five ingredients, from a choice of fifteen, from which to create their meal. The culinary delights created included omelette with Roquefort cheese and Bombay Mix, marrow and anchovy curry, and pastry cases filled with custard, dragon fruit and liver, with squirty cream garnish. The housemates scored the meals with Come Dine with Me-style scorecards, while their progress in the kitchen was mocked by Dave Lamb, who provided a guest voiceover.

Countdown - Yes, yes, we all know the Fry and Laurie sketch with Simon Sad and Liz Tragic (SLOBLOCK doesn't even have 9 letters!) - Watch the clip. But did you spot a snatch of the show in the film About A Boy, and thusly the accompanying video for Something to Talk About by Badly Drawn Boy? The Big Breakfast did Countdown Under (see what they did there?) Perhaps in an attempt to add some intellect to the proceedings, during the 2010 edition of Celebrity Big Brother, the housemates played several rounds against then Countdown champion Chris Davies via a live video link-up. Suffice it to say they lost. The IT Crowd also built the plot of an episode around the show - and what better way to display a character's geek credentials than to show him not only taking part in the show, but breaking all previous records too?

"Good morning, that's a nice tnetennba"

The Crystal Maze - Three of note here: Steve Punt gurning as a skullcapped Richard O'Brien inviting teams to do the Making a Cup of Tea game in The Mary Whitehouse Experience. The Adam & Joe Show, RO'B was played by Yoda who accompanied a load of Star Wars toys. And in Tony Robinson's Maid Marian and her Merry Men it featured in the entire last half of one episode, featuring Wayne Morris as Robin Hood doing a spookily accurate version of RO'B.

Deal or No Deal - Impressively, this was spoofed by at least three shows in its first year on air. Dick and Dom had Muck or No Muck with Ian Kirkby donning the beard, as did Rory Bremner and Jon Culshaw in the spoofs in their shows (Bremner, Bird and Fortune and Dead Ringers), neither sounding much like Noel Edmonds, but it was nice of them to try. Culshaw even appeared on DOND itself for the first birthday special, in his Edmonds guise.

Double Your Money - Spoofed by That Was The Week That Was with David Frost as a Russian Hughie Green and Lance Percival as the "normal" Hughie Green.

Dragons' Den - Done by Messrs Enfield and Whitehouse in Harry and Paul and to an absolute death by Al Murray's Multiple Personality Disorder.

The Golden Shot was parodied on The Benny Hill Show as The Golden Shoot, with Hill impersonating then-host Bob Monkhouse (during the latter's first stint); Bernie the Bolt was changed to Barney the Bolt.

Jeux Sans Frontieres - turns up in an episode of Endeavour in which a West German competitor is murdered during a game. In the Morse universe it appears to have been an ITV show.

The Krypton Factor - the lesser-known of the A Bit of Fry and Laurie take-offs. The Armstrong and Miller Show did it as "The Critical Factor".

Lose a Million, staggeringly, was deemed worthy enough to appear in the Brit horror flick Shallow Grave. Answers on a postcard...

Mastermind - Again, too many to mention really, but the stand-out must shurely go to the Two Ronnies sketch, specialist subject: Answering the Question Before Last - Watch the clip and read the updated 1983 stage version. Benny Hill had two parodies of it - (watch both here and here - the latter known as Masterbrane), Paul Hogan's show did Thickhead and Lenny Henry's show did (it says here) Masterbonk. The children's show Whizzkids Guide had Kenneth Williams as a contender (watch the clip). Magnus Magnusson himself starred in a Mastermind sketch with Morecambe and Wise (watch the clip) and also once hosted a spoof version (written by Stephen Fry) which appeared out of the blue during an edition of Wogan on April Fool's Day 1987. There was also Strip Masterbrain, at which point we draw a veil.

"He's a fat man who tells blue jokes."

Mr and Mrs / Sion a Sian - Rob Brydon loves this format so much, he's sent it up in at least two of his shows. A version of the quiz was a regular feature of the first series of The Keith Barret Show, and an extract from the real thing provided one of the better items in the generally disappointing Directors Commentary. Do you think he might be angling for a job? Meanwhile, Boredom Television sold their other camera to produce another series of Mr and Mr and Mrs for End Of Part One.

My Music - sent up during a Victor Lewis-Smith item on Loose Ends, complete with quips about trodding in some Stockhausen.

Play Your Cards Right - Played with Brucie as part of Have I Got News for You but using the Iraq War playing cards instead. "Please, this is satire!" Priceless. Also, the Lenny Henry Show did Bonk Your Cards Right. We must have been out that evening. Like at the knitting club or something.

Screen Test - a couple of brief clips turn up in the film Son of Rambow. The movie revolves around an attempt to make an entry for the show's "Young Filmmaker of the Year" competition.

Take Your Pick - Tony Hancock's the man for this. One 1958 radio episode of Hancock's Half Hour (retrospectively titled "The Prize Money") began with a seven-minute spoof, with Hancock winning £4000 despite the best efforts of Michael Miles as played by Kenneth Williams. The Yes/No interlude was also taken off by Hancock and John Junkin on an episode of the variety programme The Blackpool Show in 1966.

University Challenge - memorably demolished by The Young Ones, with real-life UC contestant Stephen Fry among the guest stars, and Griff Rhys Jones providing the definitive "interpretation" of the Bamber Gascoigne role. Watch the clip. (Class war subtext note: none of the show's three writers, nor any of the four Scumbag College actors, went to Oxbridge, but three of the four Footlights College actors really were members of the Cambridge Footlights Society, as were both Griff Rhys Jones and the real-life Bamber Gascoigne. Which leads us to suspect that writer Ben Elton (Manchester) only pitched in because they couldn't get a fifth Footlighter to appear. It's just a theory, it might be wrong, but the casting is so nearly perfect that it seems a shame they couldn't rope in, say, Rory McGrath or Tony Slattery.) Griff also gave us his Bamber in a Not The Nine O'Clock News sketch involving a supergrass being quizzed UC-style. The Who's 30 Years of Maximum R&B box set includes a UC skit that Keith Moon recorded when he stood in for Radio 1's John Peel in 1973 (and it's only 28 seconds, so you can hear it in full on any site that offers 30-second previews). The 2006 film Starter for Ten revolved around the lives and loves of a 1980s University Challenge team and featured a turn by Mark Gatiss as Bamber. The format was also copied for a Labour party political broadcast in 1970.

"Toxteth O'Grady, USA"

Ultra Quiz - also fell victim to the Radio Active team, in the 1984 episode Gigantaquiz.

The Weakest Link - most people will give the props to Frank Skinner for this one (for kicking a Maureen when she's down), but 2d:TV had a line in Anne Robinson sketches. Children in Need did a Doctor Who Dead Ringers Weakest Link. Live & Kicking did a parody called "The Leakiest Sink" with Sarah Cawood as Anne Grimbasin (or something like that). Mitchell and Webb spoofed it (far too late - 2006 is hardly the zeitgeist, chaps) as Hole in the Ring.

Wheel of Fortune - spoofed by Alexei Sayle's Stuff, complete with the Up the Chimney bonus round. Also featured in the Tony Wilson biopic 24 Hour Party People.

Who Wants to be a Millionaire? - okay, so we've had Who Wants to Be A Foreign Millionaire?, Who Wants to Win a Mini On Air? (The Big Breakfast), Someone's Going to be a Millionaire (TFI Friday), Who Wants To Sing Walking In The Air?, and Who Wants To Die On Air? And that's just the made-up formats. Meanwhile, Slumdog Millionaire, a 2008 British film based around the Indian version Kaun Banega Crorepati, was a massive critical and box office hit, winning four Golden Globes, seven BAFTAs, eight Oscars and a mighty truckload of other prizes.

The whole lot: The 2005 Doctor Who episode "Bad Wolf" was based on the premise of a broadcaster in the far future plucking people from Earth and forcing them to take part in futuristic - and generally deadly - versions of current gameshows and makeover programmes. We got to see their versions of The Weakest Link (hosted by the "Anne Droid"), Big Brother and What Not To Wear; other shows broadcast by the Bad Wolf Corporation included "Call My Bluff with real guns, Countdown where you've got 30 seconds to stop the bomb going off, Ground Force which is a nasty one, you get turned into compost, Wipeout speaks for itself, oh, and Stars in Their Eyes... if you don't sing you get blinded."

Political spoofs

Some programmes have been presented as game shows to make some kind of political or social point. In some cases, the fictional nature of the show has been hidden from the viewers until the end of the broadcast, although in truth it's not that hard to tell when something's been scripted to the hilt.

The Great Big Giveaway Show, hosted by Neil and Christine Hamilton (and with announcements by Darren Day!), was actually part of a police sting operation filmed for Channel 5's documentary Donal MacIntyre's Big Sting. Seventeen fine-dodgers were lured to Portsmouth Guildhall, supposedly to take part in a big money gameshow - and were promptly nicked. So remember, if you're on the run from the law and you get an invitation to take part in a gameshow you never applied for, held in a location that isn't a TV studio and hosted by people you could never in a million years imagine fronting a big money quiz, it may be a trap. Later in the series, MacIntyre also pulled the same stunt in Leeds, with the Richard Whiteley-hosted Just the Ticket.

Also making a serious point was the one-off Come On Down and Out, a spoof produced for Channel 4's Gimme Shelter season in 1993, in which homeless people (played by actors) competed to win a house. It was hosted by Andrew O'Connor and Annabel Giles and supported by the charity Shelter. The same charity put out a press release for a similar show called Homeless Hotel in 2010, supposedly fronted by Duncan Bannatyne, but it was a rather obvious spoof - not least because if it was real, they'd hardly use the word "tramps" in the first sentence.

In 1997, a company called Hubris made a one-off show for Channel 4 called A Date With... hosted by Tony Slattery. The show was Blind Date for disabled people, with Slattery making inappropriate jokes at the expense of the contestants. Over the credits, the continuity announcer revealed that the show was in fact a spoof - it turned out all the contestants were trained actors etc. The programme was promoted as a real game show but, as such, few people took any notice of it.

Not quite a spoof, but then not quite a game show either, 2008's two-part Horizon special How Mad are You? placed ten people in a castle, gave them tasks, and challenged three psychiatric experts to pick out the five people who had previously been diagnosed with mental health disorders. Paul McGann narrated.

Invented game shows

A few nods to game shows that didn't really exist, even if some of them sounded rather promising:

The first spoof panel game arrived as early as 1946. Ignorance is Bliss (BBC Light Programme) warned that "four hand-picked halfwits propose to prove it!". Such comic characters as a cockney ignoramus (played by Harold Berens), a fluff-headed debutante, and an upper-class twit wearing a monocle competed to answer very simple questions posed by announcer Stuart MacPherson. The show was based on the CBS series It Pays to be Ignorant, and was scripted entertainment in the music hall cross-talk tradition. Eamonn Andrews and Patrick Burns hosted later series, and the show ran until 1953.

Monty Python's Flying Circus did a number of game show spoofs, the most complete of which was probably Blackmail whereby a well-known politician had to ring in and stop the money clock before too many compromising details were, er, compromised. . Others included Spot The Braincell (a reworking of At Last The 1948 Show's "Nosmo Claphanger Show" - see below), Stake Your Claim and The World Forum Trivia Game (shurely one for the National Geographic channel?). On their Previous Record there's the radio panel game spoof What Do You Do, "a new radio quiz game loosely based on all the old radio quiz games", where the complicated rules are explained through the medium of silly noises.

Do Not Adjust Your Set featured a game show so complicated that by the time the rules had been explained, there was no time for the actual game. This sketch (penned by Eric Idle) had previously appeared on radio in I'm Sorry I'll Read That Again and was later redone by the Python team on the LP Monty Python's Previous Record. If you have Flash, you can hear the ISIRTA version on the SOTCAA Python Pages - scroll down to point 4.

2DTV suggested Paper in the Bin.

That Mitchell and Webb Sound/Look gave us the maths quiz that EVERYONE is talking about - NumberWang! The writers have suggested that it's the opposite joke to Quizzlestick. The third series of Look followed it with The Quiz Broadcast, a post-apocalyptic gameshow strongly advising you to Remain Indoors.

"Eight?"

In The New Statesman, the Honorable Member for Haltemprice, Alan B'Stard, featured on a quiz game called What's the Question? hosted by Nicholas Parsons.

Only Fools And Horses featured the incomprehensible Goldrush, hosted by Jonathan Ross, though only because ITV wouldn't let them use Who Wants to be a Millionaire?. They're actually using the set at the BBC centre for people who come in on tours!

Short-lived Jasper "Golden Balls" Carrott vehicle Carrott Confidential recreated the Sizewell B inquiry in the form of a rigged game show, Public Inquiry. One of the winning Atomic Energy Commission team was played by Steve Punt.

Father Ted gave us Morning Quiz hosted by closet alcoholic Henry Sellers and The Eoin McLove Show on which Ted's specialist subject was William Shatner's Tek Wars.

Dangerville, A short lived drama on CITV from 2003 about a fictional reality TV show where a group of teenagers have to spend 10 weeks living in the fictional village of Dangerville. Where each week some terrible Action/Horror Movie style catastrophe would take place (Such as a lion being let loose or a giant man eating plant taking over the entire village) and the contestants have to complete some dangerous task of some sort to save the residents of the village. Cue lots of over the top acting from the residents and cheap special effects to create the disasters and dangerous stunts with voiceovers from Ralf and Mark Little. If a challenge is completed successfully, each contestant wins £1,000 with a potential £10,000 to be won over the series (Except the contestants couldn't actually claim the winnings until they were 18, which they found out at the end of the final episode, much to their annoyance!)

Radio sketch show A Look Back At The Nineties gave us what sounded at the time like the ultimate bad-taste quiz "Are They Dead Yet?". Not long after, Simon Mayo did it for real and no-one batted an eyelid. The online revival of Quizmania also brought Dead or Alive to much the same response.

Yes, Quizzlestick! OK, it wasn't real, but between you and us... nobody's noticed. Or they have and they don't care. Adam and Joe also did a spoof of 100% called 200%, but that's less well remembered.

"...unless it's a general knowledge question."

Top of the Tree, Coronation Street characters answer questions until the final where they can chose to gamble for the star prize: a car (similar to Bullseye). One member of the family faces the all important question. They have various options of help such as "Phone a Family Member" (similar to Who Wants to be a Millionaire?).

Dale Winton challenges Renton to 'Take the Test' in the film Trainspotting.

In 2005, the Beeb's speculative docu-drama If... TV Goes Down The Tube featured The Cage, a boring reality show of 2015 in which some people are, er, locked in a cage, and one of them commits suicide on air.

Quickfire, the quiz game hosted by Bob Martin in the comedy drama of the same name. (The title character host was played by Michael Barrymore, who co-wrote the script with Bob Mills.)

I'm Alan Partridge contained numerous references to Skirmish, a military quiz Alan apparently hosted on that well-known cable TV station, UK Conquest. At one point there were plans to actually make an episode of this show as a one-off, but they came to nothing, alas.

Also sadly never made was a Hancock's Half Hour episode called "The ITA Quiz", though it got as far as a full camera script before being scrapped. It would have satirised the then-current "give-away shows" by having Tony Hancock as a contestant on a rigged game show hosted by Sid James. Writers Galton and Simpson have suggested the episode was scrapped because it was too near-the-knuckle in the wake of the US game show scandals; Hancock's biographer John Fisher reckons it might simply have been because Hancock himself didn't have enough screen time.

Kenny Everett's Star Quiz took celebrity guests and completely humiliated them. It featured on The Kenny Everett Video Show (or Video Cassette) where the likes of Bernard Manning, Terry Wogan and Billy Connolly were given a good gunging for failing to utter a silly secret word (e.g. Rampart) whilst being asked questions such as "A British Prime Minister on a famous occasion said 'You've never had it so good'. How many furlongs in a mile?".

One of the regular features of Channel 4's not-very-funny comedy series Balls of Steel was presenter Alex Zane duping real members of the public into taking part in various unfair game shows, such as "Alex Zane's Buzzing Game" (with a dodgy buzzer that wouldn't buzz when it was supposed to, and did when it wasn't), "Alex Zane's Lying Game" in which contestants were hooked up to a "lie detector" (actually an air-conditioning unit with bicycle lights attached) and "Alex Zane's Cleverness Game", a Mastermind-like quiz with a lot of incorrect answers. Generic catchphrase: "Nice to see you - yes it is."

It's a Shame! was a recurring skit on a late series of Going Live!. Hosts Trevor and Simon hosted a show with no budget, no prizes, no shame, and no respite from their silliness.

Victoria Wood's character in BBC's dinnerladies, Bren, appeared on "Totally Trivial", which was hosted by Henry Kelly.

A 2004 episode of Jonathan Creek (which incidentally featured Bamber Gascoigne in a cameo) satirised celebrity reality shows with a sub-plot involving the programme Animal Farm, in which minor celebs lived in a pig sty, with pigs. Eyebrows were raised when, mere weeks after this episode first aired, Five announced they were making The Farm. A sub-plot in a previous episode involved a lie detector-based gameshow pilot called Guilty Secret, some years before the similar real-life show Nothing But the Truth. (Thing of note: many years earlier, Creek creator/writer David Renwick also penned the Two Ronnies' "Mastermind" sketch.)

Creek star Alan Davies also featured in an episode of Lewis in which he played the questionmaster and organiser of a quizzers' convention at which two attendees wind up dead. OK, so that's not actually a spoof television show, but we just wanted to observe that while Alan Plater may have been a good screenwriter (and he had the CBE to prove it), his question-setting was just abysmal. Mind you, Davies' character turns out to be a conman, so maybe the poor quality of the questions was meant to be a clue. It may just be coincidence, but the real-life quiz show The Common Denominator which turned up a few years later, bore a striking resemblance to the fictional quiz format.

Sketch programme The Peter Serafinowicz Show featured "television's most futile game shows" including Who Would Like to Win £100. There was also X Factor spoof You're a C**t, Big Brother clone 'Clone House and call-to-lose channel Riddles to Riches. In a bizarre art-imitates-life situation, the programme predicted (or even inspired...?) Heads or Tails but in the Who Wants to be a Millionaire? style.

For BBC Three's Mischief, Danny Robins devised a deliberately bad taste reality show, Let's Make A Baby (a.k.a. IMPREGnation) in which thirteen strangers would share a house and the first couple to conceive would win a hundred grand each. Robins and David Brook (the man behind Quiz Nation) then toted it around the international formats fair in Cannes to see if anyone would go for it. Which quite a few did.

Marc Wootton's High Spirits With Shirley Ghostman featured Spirit Academy, supposedly a search for new "psychic talent". Which turned out to be an uncannily accurate premonition of the subsequent Britain's Psychic Challenge. Spooky!

The comedy show Rob Brydon's Annually Retentive featured Brydon playing himself (or at least an approximation thereof) as host of the invented game show Annually Retentive, a celebrity panel game about years gone by, which shamelessly steals rounds from Have I Got News for You, Never Mind the Buzzcocks and the like. The programme cuts between the panel show (which is recorded as a real show) and its production meetings and suchlike (which are scripted).

Fry and Laurie created Dont Be Dirty!, "the show that shows that you don't have to be dirty."

The Outer Hebrides Broadcasting Corporation brought us the simplistic 'Come On Now, Out With It' as part of Naked Video. Watch clip (scroll to 2:50)

Channel 4 laughed at overnight premium-rate quiz shows on Swizzcall; by the show's airing in October 2007, the genre was fast becoming history.

Another spoof of call-and-lose shows was a recurring skit in the BBC Scotland / iPlayer hit, Limmy's Show. Brian "Limmy" Limond played Falconhoof, the host of Adventure Call, a phone-in based on old-style text adventure games.

"You are dead. Game over."

ITV's big drama hope for 2008, Rock Rivals, revolved around two judges on a fictional X Factor-style talent show. In a weird blurring of reality and fiction, at the end of the series viewers were asked to vote for which fictional act should "win" the show-within-the-show.

2008 brought us Peter Kay's one-off talent show spoof Britain's Got the Pop Factor and Possibly a New Celebrity Jesus Christ Soapstar Superstar Strictly on Ice... hosted by the real Cat Deeley. Taking the joke a stage further, or milking it beyond what is strictly decent (you decide!), a spoof follow-up to the spoof show (so is that a double negative, thus making it a real show, or what?), Britain's Got an Extra Pop Factor and Then Some 2 + 1, was presented by Ben Shephard.

Britain's Got the Pop Factor... title card

Still in casting shows, Search for a Sexxbomb appeared in the 2009 series of Skins. The game sought a new member for a salacious band, and included the obligatory sob story from every contestant. And Scott Mills hosting.

In Charlie Brooker and Konnie Huq's 2011 play "Fifteen Million Merits", the world is meaningless toil, from which the only escape is talent contest Hot Shot.

"If you're beaten, you're eaten!"

Numberwang co-creator Mark Evans also had a substantial hand in the CBBC puppet show Zoo Factor, a spoof talent show for animals hosted by one Hilly Wallaby, in which the losers get eaten by a lion. That's right. A gameshow-friendly voice cast included the likes of Tim Vine, Mel Giedroyc (as Ms Wallaby) and Dave Lamb.

On a similar tip, Swift Wits was a game show hosted by Snookie Blyer which appeared as a recurring UK spot on Muppets Tonight. In each installment, the contestants must give the secret word before their 10 seconds are up in order to save the cute furry animal's life that they are playing for. Unfortunately, all the contestants get the answers wrong, thus sealing the fate of said cute furry animal, which is immediately consumed by Carl the Big Mean Bunny. The game show had one contestant, Arthur Modell, who got the answer right, but Carl eats the furry animal anyway and the contestant as well.

Meanwhile, Stewart Lee's Comedy Vehicle offered a reality show in which actors competed to play the wandering idiot in "Waiting For Godot", You Should Be So Lucky. Because the character is called "Lucky", you see, and... oh, never mind.

A 2017 episode of the very loosely-based-on-the-books BBC version of Father Brown revolved around the recording of a radio quiz, Up to You, very loosely based on Have a Go.

One of the suspects in series 3 of ITV crime drama Unforgotten was the host of a quiz show called Sixth Form Sense. We didn't get to see the show per se, but the behind-the-scenes... er, scenes, gave the strong impression of a University Challenge clone.

Top of the Klass with Myleene Klass was the subject of an amazingly long-lived (four and a half months) hoax article on Wikipedia, which we have lovingly preserved for generations as yet unborn.